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-   -   What does "flight has not been conformed" mean? (https://www.fodors.com/community/air-travel/what-does-flight-has-not-been-conformed-mean-561362/)

carlafromcorvallis Sep 28th, 2005 09:52 AM

What does "flight has not been conformed" mean?
 
I am trying to buy a ticket to China, using Asiana Airlines (EUG-SFO-INC-HGH). I got a good fare quoted to me, but when I was ready to give my credit card number, the agent told me that a portion of my itinerary on the return, from INC-SFO, "has not been conformed yet". Apparently this is different from "not been confirmed". She said that it is too far in the future and that I am waitlisted. She said I could buy the ticket and secure the fare, but would have to "keep calling the reservation office to see if the flight is conformed".

What does this mean? I'm not familiar with this term at all. I held off buying the ticket (she said the fare was good until this Friday).

Thanks for any light to be shed on this!

Patty Sep 28th, 2005 10:02 AM

More info please. Is this a travel agent or an Asiana reservation agent that told you this. How far in the future is your flight?

BeachBoi Sep 28th, 2005 10:11 AM

carla...are you going to ICN (Seoul) or INC (Yinchuan)? I am guessing Seoul as Asiana does not serve Yinchuan.But I have never heard of any buying a ticket they are not "confirmed" on particularly that segment.I could only guess that Asiana has some sort of outer window beyond which they do not confirm a reservation, only "request" it.BTW, I think the agent was indeed in their mind saying "confirmed".A non native English speaker would think they are indeed pronouncing the word correctly when in fact you were hearing "conformed".I have been waitlisted for different days that I would prefer travelling, thence having to pay a "change fee".But I dont think this is what is happening in your case.

carlafromcorvallis Sep 28th, 2005 01:02 PM

Hi Patty, I was talking to Asiana reservations directly, at their ticketing office in San Francisco. The agent spoke english quite well, although it did seem a second language. She seemed clear in her intentional use of the word, and even said it was different from being confirmed for a flight. (But obviously I am still not sure!)

My outbound travel is mid-December; the return (the part that cannot be "conformed") is early January. When I pressed for more details on this, the agent said that it would probably be conformed by late November.

And yes, BeachBoi, I am going through Seoul. I flipped the letters.

Patty Sep 28th, 2005 01:09 PM

Sorry, I am at a loss as to what she could have meant by 'conformed' :?

Gardyloo Sep 28th, 2005 01:11 PM

She meant confirmed. Probably their 1Q 2006 schedules aren't finalized yet.

Gardyloo Sep 28th, 2005 01:12 PM

Or they're uncertain as to equipment allocations, thus specific seats (or load factors) can't be determined.

carlafromcorvallis Sep 30th, 2005 10:12 AM

Update: The Asiana Airlines agent called me back the following day to tell me that the flight was now conformed, and she could issue the ticket. I think that Gardyloo was right about the equipment allocations/load factors. .

BTW - I got a very good fare by calling Asiana direct; $1116 including all taxes. The best I could find using a variety of sources and routes on the internet was $1360, and initially that is also the fare that Asiana quoted me. I was offered the $1116 fare after the agent asked me if I wanted "the lowest fare". I thought asking for economy or coach was the lowest, but apparently "the lowest fare" is a the same class of service, but a more restrictive ticket.

Fabio Oct 15th, 2005 05:52 AM

she meant not confirmed but said not conformed. You were just waitlisted. Now you are confirmed !


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